Fr. 66.00

Women, Writing, and Prison - Activists, Scholars, and Writers Speak Out

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This collection includes voices and perspectives from prisoners, former prisoners, scholars, and activists to examine the invisible and closed system of incarceration that characterizes the massive U.S. prison industry. The book explores the role of writing in carceral settings, including material realities, ethics, and social justice.

List of contents










Foreword- Sister Helen Prejean
Dedication
Preface-Ann Folwell Stanford and Tobi Jacobi
Introduction-Ann Folwell Stanford
Where We Are From-SpeakOut Writers
Section 1: Writing and Reclaiming Self
1. My Words are Brain and Bone Marrow-Jessica Hill
2. From Nonna's Table to Book Signings: Under the Influence of the Pen-Nancy Birkla
3. This Ain't No Holiday Inn, Griffin: Finding Freedom on the Blank Page-Dionna Griffin
4. A Symphony of Medicine-Shelley Goldman, a/k/a S. Phillips
5. The Girl Behind the Smile-Judith Clark
6. Writing to Survive the Madness: Letters from Prison-Sarah Anonymous and Patricia O'Brien
7. My Voice through a Deadbolt Door-Crista Decker
8. Rolling with the Punches-Irene C. Baird
Section II: Bridging Communities: Writing Programs and Social Practice
9. Good Intentions Aside: The Ethics of Reciprocity in a University-Jail Women's Writing Workshop Collaboration-Sadie Reynolds
10. Jumble of Thoughts-Sandy Sysyn
11. Incorporeal Transformations: The Power of Audience for Women Writing in Prison-Tom Kerr
12. Writing Exchanges: Composing across Prison and University Classrooms-Wendy Hinshaw and Kathie Klarreich
13. Mothers and Daughters: Meditations on Women's Prison Theatre-Jean Trounstine
14. As Others Stand By and Ask Questions-Roshanda Melton
15. Poetry, Audience, and Leaving Prison-Hettie Jones
Section III: Writing, Resistance, and the Material Realities of US Prisons and Jails
16. "...to speak in one's own voice": The Power of Women's Prison Writing-Judith Scheffler
17. Writing is My Way of Sledge Hammering These Walls-Taylor Huey
18. She Bore the Lyrical Name of Velmarine Szabo-Clarinda Harriss
19. "You Just Threatened My Life": Struggling to Write in Prison-Velmarine O. Szabo
20. Out at the Swamp and Back-Gretchen Schumacher
21. I am Antarctica: I Shriek, I Accuse, I Write-Boudicca Burning
22. No Stopping Them: Women Writers at York Correctional-Bell Gale Chevigny
23. Dear Shelly: Reflections on the Politics of Teaching Inside-Tshehaye Hebert
24. All with the Stroke of a Pen-Joyce Cohen
25. The Prisoner's Lament-Samsara
Afterword Tobi Jacobi
Hope is There Cree
About the Authors
Appendix
Resources for Facilitating Prison Writing Workshops
Selected Bibliography
Index

 
 

About the author










Tobi Jacobi is an associate professor of English at Colorado State University where she teaches writing and literacy classes. Her research focuses on understanding the problems and possibilities of situating women's prison writing workshops as alternative literacy training. She has taught lifewriting at a county prison in upstate New York and currently facilitates a women's prison writing project in Fort Collins, CO.

Ann Folwell Stanford is Vincent DePaul Professor of multidisciplinary and literary studies at the School for New Learning, DePaul University. A poet, she founded and directed the DePaul Project on Women, Writing, and Incarceration after having written poetry with women at Cook County Jail for over seven years. Her book, (Bodies in A Broken World: Women Novelists of Color & The Politics of Medicine) was published in 2003. Her articles have appeared in African American Review, American Literature, Literature and Medicine, Feminist Studies, and other journals and books.

Summary

This collection includes voices and perspectives from prisoners, former prisoners, scholars, and activists to examine the invisible and closed system of incarceration that characterizes the massive U.S. prison industry. The book explores the role of writing in carceral settings, including material realities, ethics, and social justice.

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